LVMH rose 4% this week, pacing a sector-wide lift that added roughly €22 billion in aggregate market capitalization across European luxury names. The move arrives two weeks ahead of third-quarter earnings, when Hermès reports October 24th, followed by LVMH on October 28th and Kering on October 30th. The timing is clean. The valuation multiple is not.
The rally extended a seven-week rebound from mid-August lows, when the sector traded at 18.2x forward earnings — the lowest print since March 2020. That multiple now sits at 21.4x, restoring roughly €68 billion in paper wealth but leaving the sector 720 basis points rich to its five-year median. The question is whether Q3 revenue growth can justify the re-rating. Consensus expects LVMH to post 3.2% organic growth, half the rate from a year prior, with Hermès projected at 11.8% and Kering at negative 8%. The spread reflects divergence in exposure: Hermès holds 29% of sales in Japan and benefits from yen strength, while Kering derives 34% from China, where property-market contagion continues to suppress discretionary spending among the top 10% of households.
The sector's recent strength correlates with two external catalysts. Gold reached a new all-time high of $2,685 per ounce on October 11th, typically a signal that wealth preservation motives are migrating into tangible luxury assets. Separately, French inflation accelerated to 4.1% year-over-year in September, the fastest pace since March 2023, which lifted Paris-listed banking shares alongside luxury on expectations that the European Central Bank will slow its rate-cutting schedule. That dynamic matters for luxury because 43% of LVMH's sales are euro-denominated, and a firmer currency against the dollar compresses reported growth when translated. The company's CFO noted in July that every 100-basis-point move in EUR/USD impacts full-year operating profit by roughly €180 million.
What allocators need to watch is whether management commentary diverges from the headline numbers. In Q2, LVMH reported 1% organic growth but noted that sell-through in Selective Retailing — which includes Sephora and DFS — was running 4 percentage points ahead of reported sales, indicating inventory correction rather than demand collapse. If Q3 shows a similar pattern, the rally likely extends. If management guides down for Q4 or flags weakness in U.S. department-store channels, the sector will reprice quickly. Hermès is the tell: its leather-goods waitlists remain at 18 months for Birkin and Kelly styles, a queue length unchanged since June. If that shortens, it signals the wealth effect is cracking at the top.
Kering reports last and matters most for the short base. The stock is down 38% year-to-date, carrying 11.2% short interest as of October 10th, the highest in the sector. A Q3 miss — particularly in Gucci, which represents 48% of group revenue — would likely trigger a 6-8% single-day move and pull the sector multiple back below 20x. The company replaced Gucci's creative director in March, but product from the new regime won't hit floors until Q1 2026. Between now and then, the brand is running on fumes. The October 30th call will clarify whether those fumes can carry valuation, or whether the sector's September rally was a positioning squeeze disguised as a rebound.